
Spare parts
Crisis in the stationery cupboard as our veteran laptop’s power plug finally expires. Now who will sell us a legacy LAVAFLO charging cable from 2003 (2nd edition)?
Seventy-eight per cent battery charge might just last us until we reach Uttoxeter (just off the UK’s A50 road) and JCB’s promising-sounding “World Parts Centre”. Reader Paul Ticher finds comfort in its recent arrival, given “all the damage we are currently doing to our planet”. (But you can see how his mind works: on the sad occasion of his father’s passing, Paul tells us he called on the services of a local undertaker in Donegal, Ireland, called .)
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A chance, on this journey, to catch up on that never-diminishing pile of nominatively determined names, as spotted by our Valued Readers. Peter Slessenger kindly informs us that the UK’s Nuclear Innovation Research Advisory Board was once chaired by .
Jeux avec Frontières
Down with this sort of thing! (Sixty-six per cent charge remaining…) This, anyway, was the tenor of the 30 May pronouncement of the Académie Française, which has been defending the French language against all comers (but mostly the English) since 1635. Fighting off the linguistic incursions of the gaming industry is : “pro-gamer” has become “joueur professionnel“, and don’t say “streamer”, say “joueur-animateur en direct“. You may well consider this to be a quixotic effort by the Académie, unsuited to our globalised age. Feedback couldn’t possibly comment – and has nothing but respect, in any event, for an organisation whose new appointees are given actual swords.
War games
More games news. Remember the ? Or how, three months later, a ? It seems that the game’s popularity now extends to China, and more particularly . On 31 May this year, the forum boasted a (swiftly deleted) picture of a Chinese DTC10-125 tungsten armour-piercing round, sitting atop a really quite revealing spec sheet. Now that is realism.
Inexpert opinion
Philippa Sandall’s request for a word for anti-expert (4 June) throws up yet another real-world contender, this week from Simon Rundle: “sciolist”, from the Late Latin sciolus, means “smatterer” (or, following Merriam-Webster, “one who speaks with spotty or superficial knowledge”). But why use an old word when a new one will do? Alan Carter’s “ignert” proved especially welcome here, as did Mike Newman’s suggestion that we combine “vacuous” and “orator” to give “vacuator”.
But are there doughnuts?
Should the Franklin Marble be listed under the Baltimore Gneiss? And has a variant of the Franklin Marble been misidentified in the Reading Prong region?
Answers to these and other questions are sought in an upcoming “regarding the process of updating Pennsylvania’s geologic stratigraphic correlation chart!”
It certainly isn’t our business to prick the enthusiasm packed into that charming exclamation mark, and Richard Bready, who brought this to our attention, has already nabbed his seat – who wouldn’t on learning that each forum “will last around 4 hours with breaks”? Our guess is the is like that diner in Twin Peaks, and serves – excuse me – a damn fine cup of coffee.
‘A tiny thing’
Eighteen per cent battery life left, and we are only now getting to the Kentish phallus. (Stay calm: one expert opines that it isn’t “an erect one”.)
This is, to be serious for a second, a wonderful find: a silver Roman penis pendant, with stylised pubic hair, unearthed on New Year’s Eve 2020 by metal detectorist Wendy Thompson on a farm in Kent, UK. (“I thought it was about 2,000 years old,” she told , “and it was.”)
The pendant, now officially declared treasure, might only be 3 centimetres long (“It was only a tiny thing really,” said Thompson), but its antiquity is impressive, and the material from which it is made even more so: almost all Roman penises are made of copper.
Well, such necklaces were often given to children as lucky charms, and you don’t want to give the little darlings anything too expensive, do you? It is a bit like figuring out how expensive a child’s first mobile phone should be. Only, you know, with penises.
Under the wire
Five per cent battery left! Just enough to tell you about the that, by late 2024, all small and medium-sized portable electronic devices must (4 per cent) come with USB Type-C charging ports. It is partly to reduce the 11 million kilograms of e-waste cluttering up Europe each year (3…), partly, we suspect, to annoy Apple (the company has already protested), but (2…) mostly to save Feedback’s (1…) bacon when
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